How To Track Drums – Multi Track vs. Multi Channel Drum Setups In Your DAW
What I’ve seen a lot of producers do is have each individual drum hit on its own sequencer track in a project:
How To Track Drums – Multi Track vs. Multi Channel Drum Setups In Your DAW
Multi Tracking Drum Samples in the Sequencer.
Pros:
Cons:
Audio Clip Looks Like It Is Looped Perfectly.
How To Track Drums – Multi Track vs. Multi Channel Drum Setups In Your DAW
But It Is Actually Not, And Gets Out Of Sync.
How To Track Drums – Multi Track vs. Multi Channel Drum Setups In Your DAW
Well then, we’ll use virtual instruments! That way we are dealing with MIDI information in the sequencer. This will clean up our sequencer and allow us to loop and manage our samples accurately while still having all the benefits of multi-tracking our drums. Not so fast, this solves a few problems, but it also introduces some.
If you are using virtual instruments to manage your drum samples, or even using synth drums, on a per sequencer track basis, you are using up a lot of needless processing power buy having multiple instances of virtual instruments doing a single task (bass drum, snare drum, high-hat, etc.).
If you are not wise in the ways of your software yet, in addition to this you may also be loading up an entire bank just for the sake of one sound.
Loading An Entire Drum Kit Just To Use One Or Two Samples.
How To Track Drums – Multi Track vs. Multi Channel Drum Setups In Your DAW
So what’s a producer suppose to do? We want to have as flexible a setup as possible which means not having all our drums be funneled down to a single mixer channel strip, giving us only a single master volume, pan, automation, and insert effects processing option. But on the other hand we don’t want to have 15 plus virtual instruments running just our drums and percussion.
Any drum/sample plugin and DAW that pulls its weight is going to have an option to use one instance of that plugin, but give you multiple virtual axillary outputs into your DAWs mixer. Here you can see the various options available in the drum plugin I use (Native Instruments Battery 3):

How To Track Drums – Multi Track vs. Multi Channel Drum Setups In Your DAW
If we choose the “Multi Output (8xStereo, 8xMono)” option, what this is going to do is instead of giving us one master output into the DAWs mixer, it’s going to give us 16 outputs (eight stereo, eight mono) into our DAWs mixer; all from this one instance of Battery. You can assign each sample its own auxiliary output inside your plugin, and inside the DAW mixer add auxiliary tracks onto the main sequencer track:

How To Track Drums – Multi Track vs. Multi Channel Drum Setups In Your DAW
Assigning The Outputs For Each Drum Sample.

Assigning The Outputs To Auxiliary Tracks In the DAWs Mixer.
How To Track Drums – Multi Track vs. Multi Channel Drum Setups In Your DAW
The pros of this should be obvious. We again have inside of your drum sampler easy access to each drum hit, in the DAW mixer we have volume, pan, automation, and insert effects processing available to each individual drum hit via the auxiliary channel strips.

Each Drum Hit Is On Its Own Mixer Channel Strip, With Independent Volume, Pan, and Insert Effects Processing.
How To Track Drums – Multi Track vs. Multi Channel Drum Setups In Your DAW

Each Drum Hit Also Has Its Own Independent Track Automation In The Sequencer.
How To Track Drums – Multi Track vs. Multi Channel Drum Setups In Your DAW
In the main sequencer window we have a nice and tidy work area that is not drop kicking your eyes with a thousand little audio clips and twenty sequencer tracks. You can assign each drum hit to its own key on the ‘piano roll’ and arrange and build your groves with MIDI note events.

Your Sequencer Is Not Messy, Making It Easier To Work On Your Track.
How To Track Drums – Multi Track vs. Multi Channel Drum Setups In Your DAW
I honestly can’t think of any. You have everything you gained from multi tracking your drums without any of the workflow or performance hindrances.
I hope this bit of information helps you aspiring producers get by any road blocks you may have hit in dealing with this crucial part of any EDM track. If you have been setting up your drums in a Multi Track way before, give this a try and I am confident that you will find its a more streamlined approach.
Original post http://audio.tutsplus.com/tutorials/production/multi-track-vs-multi-channel-drum-setups-in-your-daw/
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Do I see one con? In the latter case you are “stuck” with effects (limiting, compression, reverb, distor. etc.) of the plugin or soft-sampler, right? Since you cannot use a plugin on a plugin. Yes, you can send the output to effect bus and put effect there, but we were talking about streamlining.
So maybe this one as a cons?
However, thanks for the post, since I am always struggling with “drum management”. Personally also using Battery, but I don’t want to use full Kits as they are there with their drum maps. I want to make my kit, with my samples and I need to create a drum map for that and all this is so wonky and not always working the way I suspected (I am on Sonar X1)…ah, drums are pain in the butt for me.